Güiro
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The güiro is a percussion instrument consisting of an open-ended, hollow gourd with parallel notches cut in one side. It is played by rubbing a wooden stick along the notches to produce a ratchet-like sound. The güiro is commonly used in Latin-American music, and plays a key role in the typical cumbia rhythm section.
- Modern Guiro (file info) — play in browser (beta)
- Sounds of the guiro
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Güiro is also another term for an agbe or shekere as well as the ensemble and rhythm used when playing this instrument.
In Regla de Ocha, a güiro is a musicial performance/ceremony that uses shequeres, hoe blade, and at least one conga to accompany the religious songs of the Orishas.
[edit] Güiros in Puerto Rico
The güiro is one of the instruments used in traditional Puerto Rican music that are believed to have originated with the Taino people. The güiro, a notched hollowed-out gourd, which was adapted from a pre-Colombian instrument. Others maintain that similar instruments were also used in other parts of Central and South America and brought to Puerto Rico by the Arawak Indians.
The güiro is made by carving the shell of the gourd and carving parallel fluting on its surface. It is played by holding the güiro in the left hand with the thumb inserted into the back sound hole to keep the instrument in place. The right hand usually holds the scraper and plays the instrument. The scraper is more properly called a "pua". Playing the güiro usually requires both long and short sounds, which are made by scraping both up and down in long or short strokes. The güiro, like the maracas, is usually played by a singer. The instrument's rasping sound adds counterpoint to folk music but is less often used in salsa bands.
Modern güiros are also made of metal, plastic or even fiberglass.
The scraper is typically made with metal tines attached to small block of wood but may be made entirely of wood, metal, bamboo, shell, bone, ceramic or plastic. The size of the güiro can vary widely although it typically ranges from 25-35 cm long. A metal instrument from the Dominican Republic that is very similar to the güiro is called güira.
The earliest known reference to the güiro is in the writings of Fray Iñigo Abbad y Lasierra in 1788. He described the güiro as one of several instruments that were used to accompany dancers. The other instruments would typically include maracas, tambourine and one or more guitars.
The güiro is known as Calabazo, Guayo, Ralladera, Rascador, and is considered a percussion instrument.
[edit] Miscellaneous
- In the sleeve notes of the R.E.M. album New Adventures in Hi-Fi, the guiro is praised as "the ultimate instrument in musical usefulness".
- A guiro is used in Igor Stravinsky's The Rite of Spring form 1913.
- A guiro is used in the 1989 song "Wild Thing" by rapper Tone Lōc.